3 Men Get Bionic Hands After Nerve Injuries

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Three men who had lost the use of their hands in accidents are
now the first people with this type of injury to receive bionic
hands controlled by transplanted nerve tissue, a new study
reports.

During the procedure, known as "bionic reconstruction," doctors
amputated the useless hand, transplanted nerve and muscle tissue
from another part of the body to boost nerve signals in the arm,
and then used these nerve signals
to control a robotic limb.

After the surgery, the men in the study regained the ability to
perform everyday tasks such as pouring water from a jug or
undoing buttons with two hands, the researchers said. [ Bionic
Humans: Top 10 Technologies ]

"There's nothing new in the prosthetic device or the surgical
techniques," said Dr. Oskar Aszmann, a professor of plastic and
reconstructive surgery at the Medical University of
Vienna, in Austria, and co-author of the study published
today (Feb. 24) in the journal The Lancet. "But the concept of
combining these methods … with improvement of the biotechnical
interface, is what makes it so amazing."

The patients all had injuries to their brachial plexus, which
means there was damage to a network of
nerves that originates in the neck and controls movement
and sensation in the shoulder, arm, forearm and hand.

The injuries amounted to an "inner amputation" — although the men
did not lose their hands, the connections between their nervous
systems and the hands were severed, Aszmann said. "For these
patients, there's really no hope of regaining [hand] function,"
Aszmann told Live Science.

In the study, Aszmann and his colleagues pioneered a new
technique that involves amplifying the remaining nerve signals in
the arm and using them to control a prosthetic hand. To boost the
existing signals, the researchers transplanted nerve and muscle
tissue from each man's leg into his injured arm.

The patients spent about nine months doing cognitive training, so
they could learn to reactivate the muscles in their injured arm,
which were weak from disuse. They also practiced by controlling a
virtual hand on a computer or a prosthetic hand attached to their
injured limb.

Then, once the researchers were sure that the nerve signals could
be used to control a virtual or prosthetic hand, they amputated
the injured hand, and replaced it with a
bionic hand controlled by the nerves in the upper arm.

All three patients were able to control their bionic hands
successfully. Three months after receiving the prosthetic limbs,
the men scored better on multiple tests of hand function, and had
lower scores on a test of disability, the researchers reported.

It's possible that this technique could be used to replace other
limbs, too, Aszmann said. For example, a team of researchers in
Chicago has used a similar technique to make bionic legs for
patients with leg injuries.

Aszmann's lab has received a lot of inquiries from people who
would like to have their limbs replaced with bionic ones,
including some healthy people, he said. "But we're not trying to
improve humans — just restore them," he said.